Image 01 Image 03

Teacher Fired For Refusing to Use Male Pronouns For Female Student Can Sue School, VA High Court Rules

Teacher Fired For Refusing to Use Male Pronouns For Female Student Can Sue School, VA High Court Rules

VA Supreme Court: No appellate court, federal or state, has ever held, in the school context, that referring to a transgender student by preferred name and avoiding the use of any third-person pronouns to refer to the student is harassment under Title IX.

After years of litigation over whether he had a viable claim, a Virginia teacher fired in 2018 for failing to follow his school’s transgender pronoun policy is going to get his day in court finally.

On December 14th, the Virginia Supreme Court revived Peter Vlaming’s 2019 lawsuit against the West Point School Board, sending it back to the trial court that rejected it.

The high court’s unanimous decision makes it clear to future parties that Virginia will “jealously guard” the religious liberties of plaintiffs like Vlaming.

Vlaming was a popular French teacher at the West Point High School for almost seven years when he was suspended in 2018. His dispute with the school began in the fall, after he learned that one of his female students had transitioned over the summer. In the new school year, she wanted to be called by a masculine name and pronouns.

But for Vlaming, a devout Christian, it was one thing to call the biological girl by a new name, and another—against his religious beliefs—to call her a “he” or refer to her as “him.” He describes walking a tightrope in the classroom: to accommodate his trans student’s wishes, he used her preferred name; to remain “true to his conscience” he refrained from using third-person pronouns altogether.

One day, though, he slipped. According to the complaint, an in-class exercise with students walking around the classroom while wearing virtual reality goggles went awry. The trans student was headed straight for the wall.

Seeing the accident about to happen, Vlaming says he blurted out to her partner: “Don’t let her hit the wall!”

Shame on him. Those were the “wrong” words, and he wasn’t supposed to say them. Immediately, Vlaming says, he “put his hands to his mouth” and apologized to the student after class for his excited utterance meant to protect her.

The school suspended him for failing to say the “right” words the next day. He should have apologized by saying, “‘I’m sorry, I meant to say him,’” the school principal later allegedly corrected him.

Vlaming says the school then warned him that refusing to say the student’s preferred pronouns violated its policy prohibiting discrimination and harassment based on gender identity. He could not do this as a matter of conviction, and it cost him his job. As the court later put it, Vlaming was fired “not because of what he said but because of what he refused to say.”

With legal representation by The Alliance Defending Freedom, Vlaming then sued the school for violating his rights under the Virginia Constitution and state law. The trial court rejected Vlaming’s case on these pleadings.

On appeal, Justice D. Arthur Kelsey, writing for the court, disagreed and reversed the lower court decision.

Because Vlaming’s constitutional claims arose under the Virginia Constitution, he was entitled to greater protection than he would have been afforded under the U.S. Constitution.

And so, when it reviewed the teacher’s free-exercise claim, the court relied on the “strict scrutiny” standard, rejecting the U.S. Supreme Court’s controversial holding in Employment Division v. Smith, under which “the government has no obligation to accommodate sincerely held religious beliefs if it is enforcing a law or policy” that is neutral or generally applicable.  As far as the Virginia high court was concerned, “the federal Smith doctrine is not and never has been the law in Virginia, and its shelf life in the federal courts remains uncertain.”

Justice Kelsey wrote that the issue before the court was whether Vlaming’s sincerely held religious beliefs caused him to commit overt acts that “invariably posed some substantial threat to public safety, peace or order.” If so, it would apply strict scrutiny to determine whether the government’s compelling state interest in protecting the public from that threat could be satisfied by “less restrictive means.”

Under the strict scrutiny test, the court said, the trial court should not have rejected Vlaming’s claim, because “when religious liberty merges with free-speech protections,” “mere ‘objectionable’ and ‘hurtful’ religious speech, or”—as in Vlaming’s case, nonspeech—“is not enough to meet this standard.”

“The right to ‘exercise’ one’s religion,” the court said, “if it means anything, includes the right to speak or not speak and to act or not act based upon one’s religious sincerely held opinions or beliefs.”

The court held that the trial court was also wrong to reject Vlaming’s free-speech claims under Virginia’s Constitution. Teachers and students do not “shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.”

Requiring Vlaming to use “government-mandated pronouns” in addition to his trans student’s preferred name amounted to a “compelled-speech mandate” that would force him to “speak in ways that align with [the government’s] views” in a manner that defies his “conscience about a matter of major significance” the court noted, referring to the recent U.S. Supreme Court’s recent opinion in 303 Creative LLCv. Elenis. Because Vlaming’s free-speech claims involve an allegation of compelled speech on an ideological subject—gender identity—the trial court should not have dismissed them.

Justice Kelsey wrote that the constitutional right to free speech “includes both the right to speak freely and the right to refrain from speaking at all.”

The court also rejected the argument that Vlaming should have known that his nonuse of the trans student’s preferred pronouns violated the Title IX anti-discrimination standards enforced by the school’s transgender policies. Those policies were silent on the “use or nonuse of pronouns,” the court said. “Nor did they mandate the use of only government-approved pronouns for transgender students.”

And at the time he was fired, “no clearly established law — whether constitutional, statutory, or regulatory — put a teacher on notice that not using third-person pronouns in addition to preferred names constituted an unlawful act of discrimination against transgender students”:

No appellate court, federal or state, has ever held, in the school context, that referring to a transgender student by preferred name and avoiding the use of any third-person pronouns to refer to the student is a severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive act of harassment under Title IX.

In fact, the only appellate court opinion directly addressing the issue has held the opposite, Justice Kelsey noted.

Vlaming’s claims are now headed straight back to the trial court that rejected them, under the scrutiny of a high court that has promised to afford Vlaming the “robust protection” of his religious liberties —liberties that have “no deeper roots than in Virginia, where they originated.”

 

 

 

 

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments

I hope he wins big. he only problem is that many innocent property owners will pay the bill.

    JohnSmith100 in reply to FinbarOS. | December 20, 2023 at 9:30 pm

    Tweens and Teens are little shits, I bet that plenty of them are using Trans and pronouns to get over on teachers and parents

    Antifundamentalist in reply to FinbarOS. | December 20, 2023 at 10:33 pm

    If people want to play along with your fantasy, fine. No one should be compelled to do so. Personally, I don’t care what restroom a person chooses to use: provided there is a stall door between us. However, if it is a locker room where there aren’t stall doors, you shouldn’t be permitted to show off your opposite gender dangly bits. If you are going to committ to the fantasy – then committ to it fully or stay out.

The Gentle Grizzly | December 20, 2023 at 7:33 pm

I preferred my nickname at work but certainly didn’t demand folks use it.

These children are playing these stunts because they know they can make adults buckle under to their demands. In short, these children have never heard the word “no”.

    ThePrimordialOrderedPair in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | December 20, 2023 at 7:37 pm

    In short, these children have never heard the word “no”.

    They’ve never felt the sting of a well-earned spanking. And, many of them have insane, deranged parents.

    As to the adults who are pushing and defending this lunacy, they are dangerous, sick people who have no place in any civilized society. They are nothing but destructive forces bent on chaos.

    JohnSmith100 in reply to The Gentle Grizzly. | December 20, 2023 at 9:33 pm

    I should have read one more post before replying.

ThePrimordialOrderedPair | December 20, 2023 at 7:33 pm

This whole pronoun thing is inconsistent and insane, at its very core. even if you gave the left their insane idea of the world, they claim that anyone can change his gender at any time, as many times as he wants, so one can NEVER use any pronouns, at all, since one never knows which gender the person is choosing to claim at that specific time.

Pronouns in language are meant to address people (and things) without knowing much about them, such as their names or labels. That is the whole point of the PRONOUN – when you don’t know the actual noun or are using the general case. In any specifics, there is the name (which can also change, but you have to go through legal hoops to do that with people so no one can be caught in midsentence with the person deciding to change his name – with the exception of Puff Daddy P. Daddy P. Diddy Diddly Squat The Diddler).

What the left is trying to push is to render English completely unusable. Yes, this is nothing new for the self-hating, nihilistic Western Left, but they have reached new lows in idiocy with this pronoun crap. The fact that anyone in a position of power is actually claiming to take this retarded lunacy seriously just shows how sick our society has become. We really cannot be that far from the bottom, though the last step is probably going to be something in and of itself.

Woke joke. The taxpayers get stuck with the bill.

This fascistic and bullying pronoun nonsense foisted upon sane and rational people, by the obnoxious “trans” narcissists and their totalitarian, Dhimmi-crat enablers and cheerleaders, is so obnoxiously Orwellian and offensive.

[QUOTE]Requiring Vlaming to use “government-mandated pronouns” in addition to his trans student’s preferred name amounted to a “compelled-speech mandate” that would force him to “speak in ways that align with [the government’s] views” [/QUOTE}

IMO, this “compelled-speech mandate” is totally unconstitutional and he should win hands down.

SHOULD win . . .

    henrybowman in reply to Brian. | December 21, 2023 at 3:27 pm

    Especially in light of the fact that the “government’s views” are not only arbitrary and artificial, but scientifically and objectively wrong.

    Milhouse in reply to Brian. | December 23, 2023 at 11:49 pm

    Actually this is the point on which he may very well lose. A high school teacher is speaking for the government, so he is required to speak the government’s views whether he agrees with them or not. He’s not speaking for himself, so he has no first amendment rights. A college professor, however, is presumed to be speaking for himself.

Wait, somebody has to go make new law; these people can’t just assume the law they’d like to have exist?

WOW a well thought our and reasonable opinion form a court, and from Virginia too!!!!

I am glad to see a court that has not gone crazy with the liberal disorder “willful ignorance syndrome”….

This is lunacy. It is not a religious issue it’s a freedom of expression issue. When we are forced to use speech sanctioned by government or employers that contradicts not only our religious beliefs but common sense and reality as well, we are subjugated to the control of the state.

The court should have thrown this out and directed the law suit against the principal and not the taxpayers or the college. Then the principal can sue his boss and so on up the ladder until everyone involves loses their shirt.

That’s the only way to stop this because today it’s pronouns of choice and tomorrow it will be adjective of choice. You think it’s going to stop at pronouns?

I am elated that Peter is finally having her day in court.

Assuming the above narrative is correct, being fired for a slip of the tongue in an effort to promote the safety of a student is clearly going overboard.

The school is apparently aware that it can’t directly compel speech, so it is compelling speech indirectly by claiming the teacher harassed a student in violation of Title IX. But the end result is the same. Title IX was never intended to be used to violate anyone’s free speech rights under the First Amendment. If it had been, it would be unconstitutional on its face. But because it’s being used to that effect, it’s being employed unconstitutionally. (That is to say, any interpretation of Title IX that would permit the state to enforce speech codes to avoid “harassing” a student with “incorrect” pronouns would be an unconstitutional application of the law. If Title IX was intended to have this effect, then Title IX itself would be unconstitutional.)

The teacher, however, is using what I think is a weaker argument that is too specific to his situation, with his “religious objection” to the student’s demands. I don’t believe the student’s demands violate his religious beliefs, because calling someone by pronouns they prefer doesn’t indicate approval of the individual’s life choices, and the use of those pronouns does not deny to the teacher any of his beliefs (he can still hold his beliefs that the student’s choices were wrong or immoral). The broader First Amendment issue is the state’s attempt to compel speech. Although an indirect assault on his religious beliefs, the “compelled speech” counter can be used by people who have no religious objection to the student’s life choices. For instance, an atheist can dig his heels in and refuse to be compelled by the state to use specific language upon demand. I think the broader “compelled speech” argument leaves a court less wriggle-room to evade the enforcement of First Amendment protection.

    BierceAmbrose in reply to DaveGinOly. | December 22, 2023 at 12:39 am

    How they gonna populate their two minutes’ hate without compelled speech?

    Get with the program.

    Milhouse in reply to DaveGinOly. | December 23, 2023 at 11:53 pm

    But it can directly compel speech. His claim is that although it can do so in general, since the VA constitution has stronger protection for the free exercise of religion than the US constitution does, the school owed him an exemption from its policy.

Skip using pronouns entirely, with those who demand “your” participation in “their” mental illness. It’s clumsy, but simply repeat—endlessly—the person’s last name and never use a pronoun.